I should think that when a “Sr.” dies, the “Jr.” merely drops the use of the 
name “Jr.”. Besides, in most cases, the use of the Jr. and Sr. suffixes are 
merely nicknames. In many cases of the use of II and III, those are real legal 
names.



Now for a mind-blowing consideration…..there are many cases in which a child 
was given the legal first name of “Junior” such as “Junior Smith”. Now what 
happens when Junior Smith has a son and names him “Junior Smith”. Do we end up 
with  a Junior, Sr. and a Junior, Jr.? J





Brian Lightfoot







From: William Boswell [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Sunday, November 29, 2015 5:47 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [LegacyUG] Entering multiple title suffixes



If grandfather has already died, when grandson is born, father becomes "Sr." 
and grandson becomes "Jr."

I've seen this happen many times in documents where the suffix changes and it 
becomes very confusing since all of them are dead.  Then there are other 
families who keep the numbering going even though the predecessors are dead.



In my own family, I am a "III" and have to retain that because it is used in 
many official documents even though Sr. and Jr. are dead.  Instead of Jr., my 
father insisted he was a "II" probably because he was listed as such on 
documents.



Bill Boswell



From: CE WOOD [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Saturday, November 28, 2015 1:40 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [LegacyUG] Entering multiple title suffixes



Indeed, but their assumption would be incorrect.

When a son is given exactly the same name as his living father, he is  to be 
called "Jr.".

If father and son are both still alive when a grandson is born, the grandson is 
then "III".

If grandfather has already died, when grandson is born, father becomes "Sr." 
and grandson becomes "Jr."

The second (II) is supposed to be used when a son is given exactly the same 
name as an uncle, granduncle, grandfather, etc. The next in the family to be 
given exactly the same name is then "III".

Of course, these rules do not apply to kings who tended to do whatever they 
wanted anyway. :)


CE







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